I'm about to start the process of incorporating for a startup. The company itself will be in the UK or the US. However, I'm considering creating an offshore company (Honk Kong or New Zealand maybe) to own my shares. If we ever sold the company, my offshore co would make the profit, receive the funds, and then I'd be able to keep the profit offshore and only pay tax when I bring the money into whichever country I'm living in.<p>Does that make sense as a strategy? I'm assuming more founders would be doing this if it was a smart strategy, I'm struggling to find any info online, which leads me to think it's not common practice.<p>Hoping to put off any discussion of tax dodging, my goal is not to avoid paying taxes, but to choose when to pay them. I don't necessarily want to pay capital gains at the time of the sale, especially if I want to reinvest in other businesses, etc.
No. You are trading uncertain gains of tax avoidance (to cast it in the nicest possible terms) for the certain cost of complications and distraction.<p>You will certainly incur several thousand dollars in immediate costs for legal advice, filing fees, etc. You will have to pay a registered agent in a foreign country, etc., on an ongoing basis, which could be several hundred to a few thousand dollars per year for effectively forever.<p>You will also have potential issues with having to answer questions about whether you hold any financial assets offshore in the future. If you are, or become, a U.S. taxpayer, you have to disclose if you have aggregate of over $10,000 in overseas holdings. Including the holding company. You can guarantee that this makes you of much more intense interest for audit. If you lie about it, you set yourself up for penalties and possible criminal charges.<p>It will also just look weird to investors, company auditors, etc., if some offshore entity holds the shares instead of you. It won't be necessarily suspect, but it will be a distraction. Unless you have a substantial personal fortune already, in which case you likely already have estate-planning or tax-planning advisors and entities formed, it will just look bizzare.<p>In general, for a U.S. entrepreneur starting at zero and concerned about tax minimization, making sure you get long-term capital gains treatment and get your 83(b) election right is the most important. Next is trying to get Qualified Small Business Stock treatment.
You are tax dodging, there are ways to do so legally so I'm not pointing fingers or saying its wrong but that is what it is. Having said that, if you do choose to go down this path I'd make sure I have a really, really good accountant/lawyer to ensure that everything is legally sound and then I'd ensure that they will be available to watch international tax laws to make sure I'm not burned by the constantly shifting practices of tax sheltering.<p>In reality, its probably not worth the trouble. Odds are it won't matter to begin with and if it does, investors will likely not appreciate you playing games with your incorporation.
If you are trading in the UK and you are a director of an offshore company then HMRC will treat your UK company as the profit making entity and apply corporation tax.<p>If you look at Google's and Amazon's corporate structures, they are a lot more complex than a single offshore holding company.<p><a href="http://www.hmrc.gov.uk/manuals/intmanual/intm208240.htm" rel="nofollow">http://www.hmrc.gov.uk/manuals/intmanual/intm208240.htm</a>
This is the sort of thing that feels like work, but isn't. Work is harder because it requires making something of value and the risk of abject failure.<p>If you're really making a startup rather than a lifestyle or small business, you're tax liablity will be zero to a first approximation. And if the business is a successful startup, then you'll have fuck-you-money either way.<p>But tax strategies do not a successful startup make. You may not even need a corporation at this point.<p>Good luck.
In Germany there's a very simple structure that's commonplace where a UG (a sort of German Ltd) owns shares in a GmbH (a real German Ltd). In that scenario, if both are incorporated at the same time, there's only tax of around 2% if the GmbH is sold.<p>Higher tax is due when a person withdraws money from the UG, and so on. But for reinvestment in other companies this system is ideal. Unfortunately Germany is also extremely hostile to bitcoin, and we're in the bitcoin space, so incorporating here seems like a bad idea on that front.